web02.fireside.fmSun, 15 Sep 2019 06:07:15 -0500Fireside (https://fireside.fm)The Life & Times of Video Games - Episodes Tagged with “Fan Translations”https://lifeandtimes.games/tags/fan%20translations
Sat, 11 Nov 2017 23:30:00 +1100An award-nominated documentary-style podcast about video games and the video game industry, as they were in the past, and how they came to be the way they are today.
en-auepisodicAudio documentaries about the history and culture of video gamesRichard MossAn award-nominated documentary-style podcast about video games and the video game industry, as they were in the past, and how they came to be the way they are today.
novideo games,game history,the history of video games,the life and times of video games,retro gaming,retro gaming podcast,classic gaming,old games,documentary,history,interviews,gaming culture,gaming history,audio,game development,games industryRichard Mossrich.c.moss@gmail.comEpisode 6 - ROM Hackhttps://lifeandtimes.games/6-rom-hack
37019917-e642-4654-9bb3-fc473d8d79a9Sat, 11 Nov 2017 23:30:00 +1100Richard Mossfull1Richard MossAt the dawn of emulation and the World Wide Web, a group of fans discovered the Nintendo and Super Nintendo games that never made it over from Japan. One of them decided to hack into a few of these and translate them, unofficially, with help from some friends -- starting with Final Fantasy II for the NES.37:04yesAt the dawn of emulation and the World Wide Web, a group of fans discovered the Nintendo and Super Nintendo games that never made it over from Japan. One of them decided to hack into a few of these and translate them, unofficially, with help from some friends -- starting with Final Fantasy II for the NES.
Featuring quotes from Steve Demeter, founder of one of the first fan translation groups, Demiforce, who was the driving force behind three high-profile ROM hacks -- the Final Fantasy II and Radical Dreamers translation projects, and the Earthbound Zero prototype release.
Relevant links:
romhacking.net (http://romhacking.net/)
Final Fantasy II Demiforce translation patch (https://www.romhacking.net/translations/139/)
Radical Dreamers Demiforce translation patch (https://www.romhacking.net/translations/403/)
Spotlight: Earthbound on Lost Levels (http://www.lostlevels.org/200407/200407-earthbound.shtml)
Drymouth (https://www.zophar.net/pdroms/gameboy/drymouth.html)
If you're looking to try out console game emulation, I recommend OpenEmu (http://openemu.org) (Mac-only) or RetroArch (http://www.retroarch.com/). ROMs are easy enough to find, although I should note that downloading ROMs of commercial games is probably illegal in your jurisdiction.
Music Credits:
Main Theme and Castle Pandemonium from Final Fantasy II (composed by Nobuo Uematsu)
'Requiem ~ dream shore' and 'Far Promise ~ Dream Shore' from Radical Dreamers (composed by Yasunori Mitsuda)
Scars of Time from Chrono Cross (composed by Yasunori Mitsuda)
Seeker (http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Kai_Engel/The_Run/Kai_Engel_-_The_Run_-_01_Seeker) by Kai Engel
And a bunch of my own stuff
The Life &amp; Times of Video Games on the Web and social media
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Please remember to subscribe and to leave a review on iTunes or whatever podcast platform you prefer. A small donation of a few bucks a month on Patreon would go a long way, too, and it'd get you a bit of cool bonus content here and there on a private podcast feed.
At the dawn of emulation and the World Wide Web, a group of fans discovered the Nintendo and Super Nintendo games that never made it over from Japan. One of them decided to hack into a few of these and translate them, unofficially, with help from some friends -- starting with Final Fantasy II for the NES.

Featuring quotes from Steve Demeter, founder of one of the first fan translation groups, Demiforce, who was the driving force behind three high-profile ROM hacks -- the Final Fantasy II and Radical Dreamers translation projects, and the Earthbound Zero prototype release.

Relevant links:

If you're looking to try out console game emulation, I recommend OpenEmu (Mac-only) or RetroArch. ROMs are easy enough to find, although I should note that downloading ROMs of commercial games is probably illegal in your jurisdiction.

Music Credits:

Main Theme and Castle Pandemonium from Final Fantasy II (composed by Nobuo Uematsu)

Please remember to subscribe and to leave a review on iTunes or whatever podcast platform you prefer. A small donation of a few bucks a month on Patreon would go a long way, too, and it'd get you a bit of cool bonus content here and there on a private podcast feed.

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At the dawn of emulation and the World Wide Web, a group of fans discovered the Nintendo and Super Nintendo games that never made it over from Japan. One of them decided to hack into a few of these and translate them, unofficially, with help from some friends -- starting with Final Fantasy II for the NES.

Featuring quotes from Steve Demeter, founder of one of the first fan translation groups, Demiforce, who was the driving force behind three high-profile ROM hacks -- the Final Fantasy II and Radical Dreamers translation projects, and the Earthbound Zero prototype release.

Relevant links:

If you're looking to try out console game emulation, I recommend OpenEmu (Mac-only) or RetroArch. ROMs are easy enough to find, although I should note that downloading ROMs of commercial games is probably illegal in your jurisdiction.

Music Credits:

Main Theme and Castle Pandemonium from Final Fantasy II (composed by Nobuo Uematsu)

Please remember to subscribe and to leave a review on iTunes or whatever podcast platform you prefer. A small donation of a few bucks a month on Patreon would go a long way, too, and it'd get you a bit of cool bonus content here and there on a private podcast feed.